Guy,
As you suspected Comcast Cable is a shared medium. ARP traffic is high as 
there are multiple class C subnets on the network; it was an interesting 
little tidbit I discovered when I migrated to it. It's surprising the 
first time you see it, but it does work fairly well. 

Randy Grein
Network Engineer



Guy Harris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
07/11/2007 01:19 AM
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Re: [Wireshark-users] Tons of ARP packets...?






Richard Mundell wrote:

> ARP traffic appears to be what is essentially administrative traffic 
from
> other DSL customers

Not likely, given that he's not using DSL, he's using a cable modem; as 
he said:

> I have a Comcast Internet Cable connection.

DSL connections are point-to-point, so you shouldn't see traffic to or 
from other customers (unless you're communicating directly with one of 
those customers).  I have the impression that at least some cable modem 
connections are more like Ethernets, in that you're on a common network 
with some other customers, and can see their traffic.

I don't know whether that's the case here, however; the ARP requests 
*are* being sent from what appears to be a wide variety of IP addresses, 
so they could be from other clients on the net.

> (on the internet side of your connection) so your ISP's
> router can figure out IP address to Ethernet address mappings (might 
also be
> DHCP traffic... Not sure if that shows up in Wireshark as ARP traffic...

Given that IP address to Ethernet address mappings are done by making 
ARP requests, they'll probably show up in Wireshark as ARP traffic.

> The other traffic in the capture is a high volume of (failed) DNS 
lookups
> from your PC to a host called xxz0n3dxx.dyndns.org. I've confirmed this 
DNS
> entry doesn't exist,

Or, at least, it didn't exist at the time you tried it.  "dyndns" stands 
for "Dynamic DNS"; one service that DynDNS provides is free Dynamic DNS:

                 http://www.dyndns.com/services/dns/dyndns/

which lets you register a given IP address, even if it's not a static IP 
address, with a particular host name.  That page indicates what that can 
be used for.

Now:

> but I'm wondering if you might have some malware on
> your PC which is trying to "phone home".

...why some software on his machine is trying to contact that machine is 
another question; perhaps it's safe, but perhaps it's not.
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